
Person
Frédéric Dard
Writing · 1921–2000 · Bourgoin-Jallieu, Isère, France
Biography
Frédéric Charles Antoine Dard (29 June 1921, in Bourgoin-Jallieu, Isère, France – 6 June 2000, in Bonnefontaine, Fribourg, Switzerland) also known under the pen name San-Antonio, was a French writer. Known as an author of crime fiction and as a humorist, he was noted for his ability to blend the two genres. Though Dard also wrote serious fiction, his most successful books used a farcical tone. During his lifetime, Dard was the best-selling French-language author in the World. He wrote more than four hundred novels, including the San-Antonio book series, dozens of plays and several screenplays, under his own name and a variety of pseudonyms. Dard used San-Antonio both as his most famous pen name and as the name of the titular hero of his main series. The San-Antonio books eventually became so popular that Dard started using that pen name also for books that did not belong to the series. Dard was best known for his raunchy humor and his inventive use of the French language, notably French slang. Frédéric Dard was born to a working-class family: his father was a metalworker and his mother was employed in a bakery. He first grew up in Saint-Chef before settling in Lyon, where he was mostly raised by his grandmother as his parents faced financial difficulties and his father struggled with alcoholism. Dard was born with a malformed shoulder and a disabled left arm, which caused him to endure exclusion and bullying as a child. Dard's disability remained a lifelong source of discomfort for him and he made constant efforts to hide it. Dard started writing stories during his childhood, with the encouragement of his grandmother. While in high school, he began an apprenticeship in commerce but had little interest in his studies and took refuge in reading. He showed a preference for genre fiction, notably the hardboiled American-style crime novels of British authors Peter Cheyney and James Hadley Chase. His first published work was a short story titled Le Monocle révélateur (The Tell-Tale Monocle) that appeared in a children's magazine during his adolescence. While still a teenager, Dard had the opportunity to meet Lyon author Marcel E. Grancher who gave him his first job as a journalist. Dard published his first novel, La Peuchère, in 1940. That same year, he won his first literary award, the prix Lugdunum, for his book Monsieur Joos. To advance his career, Dard left Lyon for the Parisian region with his family, settling in Les Mureaux in 1948. To earn a living, he produced all sort of writings assignments. In 1949, Dard wrote the crime novel Réglez-lui son compte! which would become the first volume of his San-Antonio series: he found the name of his protagonist by looking randomly at a map of the United States, eventually choosing the name of the city in Texas. The book sold poorly but it was bought by Armand de Caro, who headed Fleuve Noir, France's leading publishing house of genre fiction. De Caro saw potential in the book and took Dard under contract. ... Source: Article "Frédéric Dard" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Known for

Vivement dimanche
Self

Spécial cinéma
Self

Sacrée soirée
Self

Champs-Elysées
Self

Apostrophes
Self

Le Grand Échiquier
Self
Samedi soir
Self

Nulle part ailleurs
Self

30 millions d'amis
Self

Death Rite
Novel
Filmography
- 2025Night CreaturesWriter
- 2024Merry ChristmasOriginal Story
- 2004San AntonioNovel
- 2001Mausolée pour une garceNovel
- 1998Vivement dimancheSelf
- 1997Maître Da CostaCreator
- 1993ComaNovel
- 1993Leon's HusbandWriter
- 1991The Old Lady Who Walked in the SeaNovel
- 1987Sacrée soiréeSelf
- 1987Nulle part ailleursSelf
- 1986Le Caviar rougeNovel
- 1982Is There a Frenchman in the House?Writer
- 1982Champs-ElyséesSelf
- 1981San-Antonio ne pense qu'à çaNovel
- 197630 millions d'amisSelf
- 1975Death RiteNovel
- 1975ApostrophesSelf
- 1974Spécial cinémaSelf
- 1972Le Grand ÉchiquierSelf
- 1971Samedi soirSelf
- 1968Beru and These WomenWriter
- 1963The AccidentScreenplay
- 1962The Empire of NightWriter
- 1962Crime Does Not PayScenario Writer
- 1962Paris Pick-UpNovel
- 1961Les Bras de la nuitNovel
- 1961House of SinWriter
- 1961Desperate FlightWriter
- 1961The MenaceScreenplay
- 1960RendezvousWriter
- 1960The WretchesNovel
- 1960PremeditatedNovel
- 1959Double AgentsNovel
- 1959Soft Skin on Black SilkDialogue
- 1959Blonde in a White CarNovel
- 1959Pensione EdelweissWriter
- 1959The Beast Is LooseDialogue
- 1958A Legitimate DefenseWriter
- 1958Back to the WallNovel
- 1957The Night of the SuspectsDialogue
- 1956Daddy's GangWriter
- 1955The Wicked Go to HellTheatre Play
- 1955M'sieur la CailleWriter
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